This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
Reason10 · 70-79, M
There are few needy Americans. The moochers on food stamps are FAT AND LOUD. They are about as needy as Elon Musk.
@Reason10 Are you saying Elon Musk doesn't have needs? He has plenty of needs. He's a needy American if there ever was one.
1. The need for stimulation
Musk appears to require constant cognitive overload — multiple companies, extreme deadlines, risk, disruption. Some people need calm; he seems to need intensity to avoid inner deadness or boredom.
2. The need for control
Most high-powered founders have a control streak, but his looks structural. He needs to shape the environment around him — technologically, organizationally, even culturally — rather than adapt to it.
3. The need for idealism (but in an engineering key)
He genuinely seems driven by visions (Mars, AI, energy transformation). It’s not just narcissism; it’s a kind of quasi-mythic engineering idealism that he needs in order to orient himself.
4. The need for adoration / validation
Not in a fragile Hollywood sense, but in the “my achievements must be witnessed” sense. He doesn’t seem to need friends; he needs followers, an audience, a mythos that mirrors back his self-image.
5. The need for conflict
Some personalities function best when there is an opponent, a headwind, a crisis. Musk seems to need friction and antagonism; it energizes him and keeps the narrative of “heroic struggle” alive.
6. The need for emotional distance
He appears to need space, not closeness. Intimacy — the ordinary kind — doesn’t seem to be where he operates comfortably. He needs relationships he can step in and out of.
7. The need to feel indispensable
Many of his actions make more sense if you assume he needs to see himself as the central node without which the system collapses.
1. The need for stimulation
Musk appears to require constant cognitive overload — multiple companies, extreme deadlines, risk, disruption. Some people need calm; he seems to need intensity to avoid inner deadness or boredom.
2. The need for control
Most high-powered founders have a control streak, but his looks structural. He needs to shape the environment around him — technologically, organizationally, even culturally — rather than adapt to it.
3. The need for idealism (but in an engineering key)
He genuinely seems driven by visions (Mars, AI, energy transformation). It’s not just narcissism; it’s a kind of quasi-mythic engineering idealism that he needs in order to orient himself.
4. The need for adoration / validation
Not in a fragile Hollywood sense, but in the “my achievements must be witnessed” sense. He doesn’t seem to need friends; he needs followers, an audience, a mythos that mirrors back his self-image.
5. The need for conflict
Some personalities function best when there is an opponent, a headwind, a crisis. Musk seems to need friction and antagonism; it energizes him and keeps the narrative of “heroic struggle” alive.
6. The need for emotional distance
He appears to need space, not closeness. Intimacy — the ordinary kind — doesn’t seem to be where he operates comfortably. He needs relationships he can step in and out of.
7. The need to feel indispensable
Many of his actions make more sense if you assume he needs to see himself as the central node without which the system collapses.
MoveAlong · 70-79, M
@FrogManSometimesLooksBothWays Evidently he so far has needed $38B in subsidies for Tesla and Space X.
BTW he's the richest man in the world. His total personal wealth is over 10X NASAs annual budget. Yet he needs welfare to get by.
BTW he's the richest man in the world. His total personal wealth is over 10X NASAs annual budget. Yet he needs welfare to get by.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
@Reason10 In a nation as rich as America, there is no reason for anyone to be needy. And once peoples needs are met, they aspire and contribute..When their needs are not met, they become a drain on society.😷






